Plantation Survey
Monticello's Plantation Archaeological Survey is an effort to create a complete archaeological inventory of the 2000-acre tract currently owned by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation.
Archaeology at Monticello
The Department of Archaeology is dedicated to studying and preserving Monticello's archaeological record, and to deciphering its meaning through comparative research. Historical topics of special focus in the Department's fieldwork include landscape history and slavery, both at Monticello and in the Chesapeake region. The Department is home to the Digital Archaeological Archive of Comparative Slavery, an Internet-based initiative designed to foster collaborative research and data sharing among archaeologists. The Department also houses extensive artifact collections from past and ongoing archaeological fieldwork at Monticello.
Monticello's Plantation Archaeological Survey is an effort to create a complete archaeological inventory of the 2000-acre tract currently owned by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation.
A major initiative is the reassessment of excavations conducted on building sites along Mulberry Row by Monticello's archaeologists in the 1980s using modern analytical techniques.
Learn how archaeologists are using Internet technologies to foster comparative research and scholarly collaboration.
Read detail reports about field projects and analytical methods of Monticello's Department of Archaeology.
Next page in
Archaeology